Menu
 Home
 News
 Articles/Guides
 Forums
 Goody Gallery
 Downloads
 FAQ
 Links
 Register
 Contact Us
 Club T-Shirts
 Journals

 Login

 Members Online
Last visits :
mazzandamazzanda
drwho69
rakkarakka
Captain FishfaceCaptain Fishface
Teresa
Online :
Admins : 0
Members : 0
Guests : 33
Total : 33
Now online :

 Joining the Club

Instructions for joining the club & getting our newsletter can be found in the our FAQ.


 Requesting Goodies Repeats

Suggestions can be found in our FAQ.


  Survey for Goodies Repeats

Fill in The Goodies Uk Audience Survey.



 
The Goodies

2 interviews to promote The Goodies Still Rule OK! tour online
14/03/2007 22:00 GMT

Posted by lisa

There's a short interview with Tim in the Maidenhead Advertiser, including a photo of him in his Union Jack waistcoat from one of the Goodies' live shows, at:
http://www.maidenhead-advertiser.co.uk/news_article.php?section=5&category=8
9&story=2953
.

Also, thanks to Jess at the Saucy Gibbon site for spotting an interview with Tim & Graeme in the Essex Chronicle.  I found the article online at: http://www.essexchronicle.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=170532&command=displayContent&sourceNode=170515&contentPK=16860217&moduleName=InternalSearch&formname=sidebarsearch

Cut & pastes of both articles can be found by using the "click here for more" link below.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Maidenhead Advertiser article:

Tim's return to the Goodie old days
Written by Editorial on 15th March 2007

   
TELEVISION comedy was never the same after they stormed the scene with their anarchic 1970s show.

Their surreal sketches and manic individual performances brought them international acclaim and personal fortune. Now the Goodies are back, with a 24-night tour that arrives in Windsor on Sunday night.

Tim Brooke-Taylor, one of the Goodies and a long-term Cookham resident, said performing in front of a home crowd will be a nerve-wracking experience.

He said: "So many people have said to me that they are coming to see me that I am slightly nervous. They are all very loyal and they will all be buying tickets."

The tour comes to Britain on the back of two sold-out trips to Australia in 2005 and rave Edinburgh Festival reviews last year.

Brooke-Taylor said: "It is thanks to Australia that we are doing anything at all." "Because they had faith in it, we sold out in huge theatres. The difference is, of course that, they have gone on showing the programme on television." "Although I know we've got a good show, we are pitching it to a different audience here, and we're having to say 'look, we think this is good'."

Brooke-Taylor said the tour, which goes on the road without founding member Bill Oddie, will be a celebration of the original television show - which often included routines filmed in Maidenhead. Alongside Graeme Garden, he will be performing a selection of new sketches interspersed with clips from the original TV series.

The comic, who has lived in Cookham since 1983 and is president of the local branch of Relate, said today's comedians leave him feeling optimistic about the future of British comedy. He said: "I'm very lucky because, on my radio show I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, I've been able to ask people I like to join me. "They are people like Stephen Fry and Ross Noble, and you can tell they are people I admire because they end up on my team."

The Goodies Still Rule OK! comes to the Theatre Royal in Windsor on Sunday and to the Wycombe Swan on Saturday, March 24.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Essex Chronicle article:

THREE OF A KIND


08:00 - 14 March 2007

Tim Brooke-Taylor throws his head back and laughs long and loud: "The only Goodies we've seen recently are the ones on Celebrity Big Brother!"All that, however, is about to change. Following on from a hugely successful run at the Edinburgh Festival last summer, an extremely popular comeback last year on BBC2 with The Return of the Goodies and two sold-out tours of Australia, the much-loved comedians will be appearing at a the Mercury Theatre, Colchester this Saturday. As the title of their new show puts it, The Goodies Still Rule OK!

As they prepare to take their show on the road this spring, Tim and his long-term comedy partner Graeme Garden are sitting in capacious armchairs in the bar of a central London hotel drinking cappuccinos. As funny off stage as they are on it, the pair make for highly entertaining company.

The Goodies Still Rule OK! is a celebration of one of the nation's favourite TV comedy shows of the 1970s. The television series, immensely popular with all ages, started in 1970 and ran for 74 episodes until the team called it a day in 1981.

The show centred on a trio of trouble-shooters - the loveable Bill Oddie was the third member. They rode around on an iconic three-seater bicycle (or trandem) and attempted to solve problems "anytime, anywhere".

Featuring a highly catchy theme tune and songs by Bill, the series developed into a satirical, surreal festival of verbal and visual humour, replete with special effects, explosions, outsized props, camera tricks and slapstick worthy of the silent movie greats. Oh yes, and a giant kitten.

The Goodies, who also had a number of hit singles, including The Funky Gibbon and The Inbetweenies, twice won the Montreux Silver Rose. In addition, they made guest-star appearances on every major British TV show, including the now-legendary first Amnesty benefit, A Poke in the Eye with a Sharp Stick.

In the Goodies' live show, Tim and Graeme share with us their favourite sketches and behind-the-scenes anecdotes. Melding reminiscences with ridiculousness, they recall the "naughty bits" banned by Australian TV (which screened the show religiously at 6pm every evening for decades); the sketches from the student revue that took the troupe to Broadway; and Tim's famed Union Jack waistcoat. The show also features the odd explosion (insurance pending).

Due to filming commitments, Bill (who has established himself as BBC2's resident wildlife expert with programmes such as Bill Oddie Goes Wild and Springwatch) will beam his performance in to the venues via the wonders of digital technology.

The crowd has certainly gone wild wherever the team have performed The Goodies Still Rule OK! "When we toured Australia," recollects Graeme, who is dressed in a brown corduroy jacket and purple shirt, "the audiences were everything that old men like us could wish for - young, bright and grateful!

"Because the TV show went out every night at 6pm, several generations grew up with us."

Tim, who since 1971 has starred alongside Graeme in the impossibly popular R4 "antidote to panel games", I'm Sorry, I Haven't a Clue, chimes in that, "pompously, you could say that like The Simpsons, The Goodies works on two levels. It appeals simultaneously to both adults and children.

"What particularly delighted us was how affectionate people were. We had these tough Outback guys coming up and saying, 'thank you for providing the sole bright spots in an otherwise terrible childhood'. Those moments brought a lump to the throat.

"But the nicest thing was the number of gorgeous women of 30 appearing at the stage door afterwards and asking, 'can I have I hug?' We had to say, 'careful with these old bones!' They were so enthusiastic, it gave us the push we needed to perform the show here."

When they did, the response was equally positive. "The reaction in Edinburgh was better than we dared hope," remembers Tim, 66, who wrote for The Two Ronnies and Marty Feldman. "What was so encouraging was that the audience covered all ages."

The Goodies are appealingly modest when asked about why they continue to be so popular. "People must have long memories," ventures Graeme, 64.

"Or very bad memories," adds Tim, quick as a flash. He goes on in a more serious vein. "Our humour has endured because it's universal. When we were writing, we were always thinking, 'what would make us laugh?' That was always our yardstick."

Graeme, a qualified doctor, who has written for Doctor in the House, Bremner, Bird and Fortune and Smith and Jones, chips in that, "we also aimed to make the comedy accessible. We tried to put in a joke every couple of lines."

Tim, who is done up in a smart blue shirt and corduroy trousers, continues that the three Goodies, who met at the Cambridge Footlights in the early 1960s, each stood for different, contradictory traits.

"Because I've got a double-barrelled name, I was the toff. Because he was a qualified doctor, Graeme was the eccentric boffin. And because he was a bloody revolutionary, Bill was the bloody revolutionary. Nothing's changed, except Graeme and myself!"

The pair, who remain very close to Bill ("we're seeing him for lunch in an hour," Graeme reveals), enjoy a great chemistry. That also contributes to the show's appeal. "We know each other almost too well, so in any conversation we have a ready-made shorthand," smiles Tim, who studied law at Cambridge and used to share notes with his great friend John Cleese.

Graeme, who has written a new R4 comedy entitled About a Dog and starring Alan Davies, pitches in that, "the great thing is that we still make each other laugh. I'm very happy to watch Tim on stage. Except when the audience are laughing at him and not me, then, of course, I curse him!"

There is clearly a genuine buzz between the pair when they perform together. They relish the live experience. "I love audiences," beams Tim.

"It's like we're all having a great time together." And that is exactly the sensation experienced by audiences at The Goodies Still Rule OK!

As they head off to meet Bill for lunch, I ask Tim and Graeme whether the tour will be seriously rock'n'roll. Will they have a budget for painting the town red every night? "No," Tim deadpans, "we'll spend any money we have on a caring nurse and a nice cup of Horlicks!"

The Goodies are playing at the Mercury Theatre for one night only on Saturday March 17; For booking information on the tour, go to www.goodiesruleok.com

Email Print

Comments
We apologize, but you need to login to post comments. If you don't have an account, why don't you register? It's free!
Goody Calendar 
April
<<< Apr 2024 >>>
S M T W T F S
31 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 01 02 03 04

The Goodies - The Complete BBC Collection (DVD) 
ORDER HERE! or here

An Audience With The Goodies DVD 
Order Here or Here

The Goodies: The Complete Collection (BBC & LWT Series) 
Order Here

Clarion and Globe  
To subscribe to our monthly newsletter send an empty email to newsletter-subscribe@goodiesruleok.com and reply to the confirmation email.

Latest Newsletters:

* C&G 241 February 2022
* C&G 240 October 2021
* C&G 239 September 2021




Back issues are available in our Articles and Guides section

The C&G also has a Facebook Group. The Goodies Rule OK Fan Club - Clarion and Globe News Press

Editor Contact Details Jenny Doyle: enquiries@goodiesruleok.com

Other Online Goodies Resources 
Podcasts:
* The Goodies Podcast
* The Goodies Pirate Podcast

Twitter:
* Bill Oddie's twitter feed
* Graeme Garden's twitter feed

Goodies' Official Sites:
* Bill Oddie's official website
* Official I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue website

Other Fan Sites:
* The Goodies Facebook Page
* The Goodies Illustrated Guide


Powered by 
phpWebThings powered


 This website was created with phpWebThings 1.5.2.
© 2005 Copyright , The Goodies Rule - OK! Fan Club 

Website Security Test